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Some people in 1982 were of the opinion that if Endurance was withdrawn, the Argies would attack. However, while the causal link may be clear now, at the time it wasn't necessarily so obvious. As we'll find out in about just over 7 years - 20-20 vision is always perfect.
The left have always demonised Thatcher, claiming she planned the Falklands campaign in order to ensure an election victory. I think that is more born out of their irrational impotence fueled hatred than out of any really evidence.
I will always remember a document on BBC 2 a few months prior to the invasion. It spelt out that if the HMS Endurance is withdrawn, the Argies will attack
Never bought into this theory. HMS Endurance would have had at best a company of Marines and no other significant offensive armament. It would have been incapable of stopping any invasion force.
Maybe she was way too clever? She was never going to get re-elected. She knew what she had to do to save the country(and God knows we need a leader like that now) and knew she was fooked.
Surprised the Argies fell for it. I mean look at Goose Green. 600 Argies dug in. Should require 1800 to get them out. Took 200 paras. It was men versus boys.
Plus if they had won we would have nuked them......
The 1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands by Argentina took Margaret Thatcher by surprise, newly released government papers have shown.
I will always remember a document on BBC 2 a few months prior to the invasion. It spelt out that if the HMS Endurance is withdrawn, the Argies will attack
Britain was initially taken by surprise by the Argentine attack on the South Atlantic islands, despite repeated warnings by Royal Navy captain Nicholas Barker and others. Barker believed that the intention expressed in Defence Secretary John Nott's 1981 review planning future withdrawal of HMS Endurance, Britain's only naval presence in the South Atlantic, sent a signal to the Argentines that Britain was unwilling, and would soon be unable, to defend its territories and subjects in the Falklands
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